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  • the Prime Minister deplored racial discrimination in tJle 2 u.s .• w.iich he termed a "black spot" on the American imageo Kr. Johnaon turned to the topic of u.s. aid and quoted Dia, vho had recent1¥ stated the time for poleml.c• and sterile debate
  • . ....:.-_ _ _ __._..__ .... Eu . . . . . ._ _ ~ INTER-AMERICAN STALEMATE Washington's dismay, however, the coup it would perhaps have liked to see in Port-au-Prince now took place in Santo Domingo instead. On September 25, Dr. Bosch's seven-month-old govern­ ment
  • America'• aympathy for CncboalovaJda in a D.Clll-political and American ■ ettiag. W. W. Roatow ---- Speak to Jim Jones tentati•ely about a time No ---- Speak to me _ _ __ -· ·•:i~" . ·· • ,. • , ~ T0 B~ :'\}.! f..Dt
  • , ·-· ·· ... .. . The President - TO: ~ ,Jtr¥ FROM: H. SUBJECT: American Observers ·of~the Vietnamese Elections c. Lodge l~ -··· . . . ,., ... . Anothe -expression of . opinion concerning the Vietnamese elections from . one of the American Observers has come to me
  • . The Soviet delegate agreed, but made a strong anti-American speech in which he commented on the failure" of the negotiations in Geneva and specifically charged the U.S. with considering the use of nuclear weapons once again. Ambassador S~yth . made
  • 4:.3 \..J (\_ P·robe Reveals Foreign-Paid News Junl{_ets By Laurence Stern Stn!f ncportcr A New York public relations firm arranged free red­ carpet junkets for news executives who in turn distrib­ uted unlabeled foreign propaganda to American
  • TO BELI EVE TH~T THE AMERICAN CORRES­ PmJDt.:NTS HERE \·!OULD EVER ACCEPT A THE IU-KY VICTORY ~ J lo..,,. \
  • and to accentuate the Sino-Soviet split. As the USSR, which is a Co-Chairman of the Geneva Agreement, is strongly supporting North Vietnam, and has vigorously denounced American efforts there, the extent to which India feels it can go· to be of assistance
  • or about what, lf anything, the US government should be doing about this. Mr. Saunders deliberately avoided asking what he wanted the USG to do. The action he wants from the US government is on a different problem. He would like the American Red Cross to do
  • walls are enc:tusted a master's shame the headquarters ot the other masters but that this room wherein American subjects the master's presence panels and beams and parqueted is a massi-wt hall floors. is a smaller ot the master will sit
  • treatment. These American pilot• came here and sowed destruction 011 medical establishments, schools, hospitals, po9ulated areas. irrigation works: they dropped phosphorous bombs. Their cri.rnea must be, puniabed. This baa m>thing to do with the ICRC. We
  • about th1~. Mr.. Saundere deliberately avoided ,u,kf.ng what he wanted the USG to do.. The action he:, wanbl from tho US .g overnment. lo on a dlf£e-rent problou1. Ho would like the American Red Crtuu~ to do •omethins bi tho Kurdleh contr
  • than any previous visit by a foreign statesman to modern Gennany--including probably even de Gaulle's state visit of last September. There are a ntDDber of reasons for this: 1) The visit will be the first to Germany by President Kennedy since assuming
  • 28, 1966 9:15 AM MR. President: I attach a substantial memo prepared oy Bill Bowdler of my staff which will bring you up to date on Latin American matters. The most striking ach:ievement is the Chilean copper price announcement. This is a real
  • American people must be even more democr tic than he, so I am gl d to be f'r1end of American people. 11 Press str seed no other statesman h sever befriended and mingled 1th local people like Johnson has. Seen as showing complete equality among freedom
  • --the best you have. votes are getting closer as Hitler comes closer. place May 28. You vote to fill She ppard's great Send the best man who may help now--a man who knovrs now. is so very, very short. The But' vote as fine Americans, denyin The time
  • Gus ivortham, Chairman of the Board, Insurance Company;iouston, Texas. Approve___ Disapprove --American __ General _ Edward B. iust, President, State Farm Insurance Company, Bloomington, Illinois. He is considered very much behind the program
  • WITHDRAWAL SHEET (PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARIES) FORM OF DOCUMENT DATE CORRESPONDENTS O R TITLE F.Cf, ~ v6i t1- n tt1 "Elantiago,, ~ JI.. ~, .. &/I 3.1,5..1.- RESTRICTION NI. J C,/... 'i I ,, Inter-American Meeti.ng o-f ·-P1esi:-dents unda-t-ed
  • finished reading my book, and his wife ,,,as teaching from my book, as a matter of fact, up at the American University. thrilled about that. So I was just very Then the Vice President walked by, and Bill introduced me to the Vice President. He said
  • '• contribatlGD AIDE MF.MOIRE RE: Australia - Possible Cooperation with Latin America through the Inter-American Development Bank 1.- Camnercial and financial relations between Australia and Latin America in the past have not been very close. In essence
  • inside ~;i•ot agam ,!aying : t· e,,ata te~ bef-ore various Congreaaional Coin- , prived ;native born American clti- • • thill eoantry. My last book, ·Tteas- menld wats.:_ argumetnd~ iviets •n~ 1mittees. The South Carolina Sen- •zens •of 'inherite~ incomes
  • . / 7. AI1C:H ICAN S IN CUBA THi~ CUBA N GOVER i~I1lENT COi~TINUES TO BLOCK THE DEPARTURE OF ABOUT 1,000 AMERICAN CIT !ZENS WHO HAVE REQUESfED PERMISSION TO L£hVE. SINCE MANY ARE DEST IT UTE, STATE HAS AUTHORIZED THE S>JISS T O PROVIDE THEM
  • INTERVIEWEE: LOYD HACKLER INTERVIEWER: STEPHEN GOODELL PLACE: Washington, D. C. Tape 1 of 1 G: We were talking off the tape about An American Melodrama, the book, and I thought we could begin the second session with your comments about some
  • . first started out using his column he tried to develop attacking President Truman on practically everything. get off, it didn't take. But it didn't His attacks on Truman fell a little flat. It didn't take with the American people believing
  • a high degree on his examination record, but he didn't know how to put it to work for the people when he was appointed as secretary of state. He didn't have that kind of ability to put this across to the American people what the President's program
  • INTELLEcTUA.L, STATESMAN MANAGE . TO PERSUADE MR. STEVENSON TO '·BE AT LEAST MORE ...:· RESTR AINED. IN HIS PRO-TU~KISH STAND?." . . , 1 PRO-GOVT .ELEFTHERIA EDITORIALIZED: . "IT Is· KNOWN MR. . STEV ENSON REPRESENTS, NOT WIT HOUT RECOMPENSE ·, .TURKISH
  • £LIEF·THATTHE TIMINGOF CESSATION WASA PLOYRllAT£D TO OURELECTIONS. ~UCHMOR£SERIOUSIS THE FACTTHATCONSCIOUS AS·KE IS OF THE AMERICAN PEOPLE•s0£T£RMlNAlION TO VINDUP TH£ FIGHTINGANDWITH­ DRAW, K£ ALMOST CERTAINLY F£ARS'tHATONCEVE HAVEHIM ATTH£ CONFERENCE
  • ·AN' IRREVERSIBLE. TRE?ID TOWARD..'A PEACEF'UL: RESOLUTION OF"1H£ CONFLICT ovrn\1/HEL~S THE MER ITS Or Ttt:: • ARGU!'IENTs·· IN PARI s. THROUGHOUT THE AMERICAN REPU9LICS WE CONTINUE TO HAVE FU DAMENTAL SUPPORT ALTHOUGH SIGNS OF BOREDOM ARE ON THE INCREASE. IN·AFRICA
  • of the American public. Certainly the wisest course would not be to totally abandon to the Communists the full initiative to do what they wished, but it was a fact that it would be hard to preserve and continue the United Nations Command in Korea if the Command
  • U. ·we of course deny an export license. s. " .; There are, however, · . many cases in which no clear security issue arises. and yet ·we know that the Soviets are using .American :machinery and equipment a.s ·a. basis for copying our techno.logy
  • of a statesman in the sense that he didn't get so personally involved. F: You didn't feel that he was out to gut you at all? C: No. We did have one item in the State Department budget. It was sort of a quirk in the State Department budget that we knew
  • ATTACHMENT / I I 6:SG~T/ EX.DIS TELECONFERENCE BETWEEN THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE AND AMERICAN EMBASSY ATHENS ON January 11, 1968 BJ. I ...SEC RE'f / F!XD IS DECLASS I ~D E.O. 12958, Sec. 3.6 NW qt, .. 30'7 N I .... ,, --- SECSTATE
  • Pakistan's increasing interest in West A~ia. (3) Contlnue to sell spare parts to both countries 1n order to keep presently-held American equiptllent in operating oondit1on. (4) Refuse to sell, either directly or through third countries. lethal end items. (5
  • • Richmond, Virginia. lawyer, former President of the American Bar Assoc.iation. (Gene urges you check with Bernard Siegel of Philadelphia. i£ you're interested) Gerhard A. Gesell, Washington, D. C. lawyer (Covington & Burling} W. W. Rostow
  • other contribution he can toward reducing the current tension. Your recept i on of an Arab statesman of this caliber would help balance any Arab reaction to the visit of Foreign Minister Eban of Israel. Dean Rusk
  • in terms of American counteroffensive capabilities, would seek to exploit general war-weariness and disillusionment just as Giap used Dien Bien Phu to such political purpose in 1Q54. Only in Giap's current seeming rejection of the doctrinaire l\faoist rule
  • CONSIDERATIONS IT SIMPLY PAGE 2 . RUQMAT 2419-S ! CR t 'f NOT REALISTIC TO ANTICIPATE THAT AMERICAN PEOPLE WOULD INVOLVE THEMStLVES IN ANOTHER WAR~Now. ­ (8) COULD KING TAKE IT FOR. CERTAIN THAT u.s~ AND ALLIES WOULD KEEP BULGARIA OFF GREECE'S BACK